ABSTRACT

As author of the hugely influential The Economic History of India 1857-1947, Tirthankar Roy has established himself as the leading contemporary economic historian of India. Here, Roy turns his attention to labour and livelihood and the nature of economic change in the Subcontinent. This book covers:

  • economic history of modern India
  • rural labour 
  • labour-intensive industrialization
  • women and industrialization.

Challenging the prevailing wisdom on Indian economic growth - that it is bound up with Marxian, postcolonial class analysis - Roy formulates a new view. Commercialization, surplus labour and uncertainty are seen as equally important and the end result reconciles the increasingly opposed view of economists and historians.

chapter 1|22 pages

Introduction

chapter 2|21 pages

Economic history and modern India

Redefining the link

chapter 3|30 pages

Rural labour and colonialism

chapter 4|18 pages

Agricultural labour

Lessons from wage data

chapter 7|15 pages

Women and industrialization

chapter 8|12 pages

Women in the crafts

chapter 9|11 pages

Labour and power

A critique of ‘subaltern studies'

chapter 10|4 pages

Conclusion